228 S.W. 194 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1921
The statement of this case is so fully set forth in the opinion-by the honorable Court of Civil Appeals (207 S. W. 405) that it is not deemed necessary to here make any extended statement of the ease.
Suffice it .to say that Mrs. Gay Ford, as owner of the outstanding receiver’s certificates, Harry Ford, as owner of one of the Van Valkenburg vendor’s lien notes, A. T. Page, as receiver, C. D. Jessup, as the attorney for the receiver, and W. S. Sproles, as the master in chancery, in a joint petition applied for writ of error to the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals.
All these applicants, save Harry Ford, assigned error to the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in giving priority to the vendor’s lien notes sought to be foreclosed by Van Valkenburg over the cost, expenses, and receivership certificates in the receivership of the Mugler Manufacturing Company. Harry Ford assigned error to the judgment of the appellate court in giving priority to the cost, expenses, and receivership certificates over one of the vendor’s lien notes which he held as secondary to the notes retained by Van Valkenburg.
The Supreme Court in granting the writ of error made the notation:- “We think the ninth error assigned should be sustained.” The ninth error is that which Harry Ford assigned, and is not assigned by his copeti-tioners.
The Muncie Oil Engine Company also sued out writ of error to the judgment of the appellate court in giving priority to the vendor’s lien notes and cost and expenses of receivership over its debt and lien.
It will suffice, in the disposition of the case as to the Muncie Oil Engine Company, to state that since the submission of this cause there has been filed in this court an agreement showing that it and R. W. Van Valkenburg have settled their differences and agreed to a dismissal of the case as to the writ granted it.
The effect of the findings of the trial court is that the plant should not have been operated; that the town had two light plants, and -was not large enough to justify the operation of two, and that one was a hindrance to the other; that without additional equipment and extensions the light plant could not operate at a profit; and that the orders of the court in authorizing the operation of the plant were improvident and an abuse of discretion. Its judgment, however, proceeded upon the theory that, notwithstanding the improvidence of operation and the abuse of discretion by the court granting the receivership, yet, as a matter of law, it did not affeet the priority to be given to the cost and expenses incurred in the operation of the plant.
The Court of Civil Appeals approves these findings of fact and sustains the assignments of Van Valkenburg attacking the legality of the orders of the court authorizing the operation of the plant and the expenditures incurred therein.
While we are not to be understood as approving all that is said in the opinion of
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